Gramlich Michael W, Klyachko Vitaly A
Departments of Cell Biology and Physiology, Biomedical Engineering, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Departments of Cell Biology and Physiology, Biomedical Engineering, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Cell Rep. 2017 Feb 28;18(9):2096-2104. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.02.010.
Vesicle sharing between synaptic boutons is an important component of the recycling process that synapses employ to maintain vesicle pools. However, the mechanisms supporting and regulating vesicle transport during the inter-synaptic exchange remain poorly understood. Using nanometer-resolution tracking of individual synaptic vesicles and advanced computational algorithms, we find that long-distance axonal transport of synaptic vesicles between hippocampal boutons is partially mediated by the actin network, with myosin V as the primary actin-dependent motor that drives this vesicle transport. Furthermore, we find that vesicle exit from the synapse to the axon and long-distance vesicle transport are both rapidly and dynamically regulated by activity. We corroborated these findings with two complementary modeling approaches of vesicle exit, which closely reproduced experimental observations. These findings uncover the roles of actin and myosin V in supporting the inter-synaptic vesicle exchange and reveal that this process is dynamically modulated in an activity-dependent manner.
突触小体之间的囊泡共享是突触用于维持囊泡池的回收过程的一个重要组成部分。然而,在突触间交换过程中支持和调节囊泡运输的机制仍知之甚少。通过对单个突触囊泡进行纳米分辨率追踪并运用先进的计算算法,我们发现海马体突触小体之间突触囊泡的长距离轴突运输部分由肌动蛋白网络介导,肌球蛋白V作为驱动这种囊泡运输的主要肌动蛋白依赖性分子马达。此外,我们发现囊泡从突触向轴突的出芽以及长距离囊泡运输都受到活动的快速且动态的调节。我们用两种互补的囊泡出芽建模方法证实了这些发现,这些方法紧密再现了实验观察结果。这些发现揭示了肌动蛋白和肌球蛋白V在支持突触间囊泡交换中的作用,并表明这一过程以活动依赖的方式受到动态调节。